Whilst a savage piece of engineering, the reality was if you pressed down hard on the accelerator the car would not only spin its wheels but rip them to shreds.

The power being laid down was greater than the grip provided by the wheels, making them spin.

So what is Torque Steer?

Having established that torque is the rotational power the car can exert on its wheels; torque steer is, unsurprisingly when the power is applied unevenly to the drive wheels.

This issue mostly affects front wheel drive cars, causing the steering to pull in one direction or another. Depending on the power output of the vehicle this can be a minor pull to a startling and sharp veering motion that needs concerted effort to correct.

What causes it?

Torque steer can be caused by a number of things including a variance of traction between the two drive wheels. Tread or even tyre pressure can impact on the car’s ability to pull away in a straight line.

The most common cause in front wheel drive cars is a transversely mounted engine. In these types of cars the engine, transmission and differential are all mounted in a single place – the engine bay.

In these instances the differential and transmission hang over one side of the engine. This means the half shafts are of unequal lengths, delivering more power to one wheel over the other.

The problem can be compounded during sudden acceleration as the car rocks backwards, shifting weight off the drive wheels, decreasing downforce and causes the wheels to spin.

Anyone with a front wheel drive car who’s made a bit of a daring manoeuvre at a T-junction will no doubt have experienced that sickening feeling when you attempt to pull away and the wheels fight for grip at the exact wrong moment.

Rear wheel drive cars rarely experience torque steer because the design of the engine, differential and transmission are linear which means the half shafts are of equal length.

Can it be fixed?

Strictly speaking, no.

It can be compensated for however. Vehicles can be programmed to limit the amount of power delivered to the drive wheels until the car detects there is sufficient downforce and traction, by using various types of differentials.

Another common solution is to programme the power steering to detect and compensate for the torque steer. So whilst the issue remains, the driver isn’t doing the heavy lifting to correct it.

This eliminates the addition concentration and fatigue this would cause over long journeys.

Ultimately the best way to limit torque steer is to show restraint when accelerating for the first few feet.